Report:
Displaced by disasters: 32 million people uprooted in both rich and
poor countries in 2012
iDMC,
13
May, 2013
GENEVA, 13 MAY 2013
(IDMC) – A new report released today by the Internal Displacement
Monitoring Centre (IDMC) reveals that 32.4 million people were forced
to flee their homes in 2012 by disasters such as floods, storms, and
earthquakes. While Asia and west and central Africa bore the brunt,
1.3 million were displaced in rich countries, with the USA
particularly affected.
98% of all displacement
in 2012 was related to climate- and weather-related events, with
flood disasters in India and Nigeria accounting for 41% of global
displacement in 2012. In India, monsoon floods displaced 6.9
million, and in Nigeria 6.1 million people were newly displaced.
While over the past five years 81% of global displacement has
occurred in Asia, in 2012 Africa had a record high for the region of
8.2 million people newly displaced, over four times more than in any
of the previous four years.
“In countries already
facing the effects of conflict and food insecurity such as in
Nigeria, Pakistan, and South Sudan, we observe a common theme” says
Clare Spurrell, Chief Spokesperson for IDMC. “Here, vulnerability
to disaster triggered by floods is frequently further compounded by
hunger, poverty and violence; resulting in a ‘perfect storm’ of
risk factors that lead to displacement.″
There is also
increasing scientific evidence that climate change will become a
factor. A 2012 Special Report from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) found that there is some evidence to support
the claim that “[d]isasters associated with climate extremes
influence population mobility and relocation, affecting host and
origin communities.”
IDMC’s report
highlights how disaster-induced displacement takes a toll in both
rich and poor countries with the USA appearing among the top ten
countries with the highest levels of new displacement, with over
900,000 people being forced to flee their homes in 2012. People in
poorer countries, however, remain disproportionately affected and
make up 98% of the global five year total.
“In the US following
Hurricane Sandy, most of those displaced were able to find refuge in
adequate temporary shelter while displaced from their own homes”
says Spurrell. “Compare this to communities in Haiti, where
hundreds of thousands are still living in makeshift tents over three
years after the 2010 earthquake mega-disaster, and you see a very
different picture″.
According to the IDMC
report, a critical component to improving community resilience and
government responses to disasters is better data collection on people
who have been displaced. “Currently the information available is
biased, often only focusing on the most visible people who take
shelter in official evacuation sites or camps” says Spurrell. “We
need to know more about those who seek refuge with families and
friends, people who are repeatedly displaced by smaller disasters, or
those who are stuck in prolonged displacement following a disaster–
not just those that make headlines.”
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